-Caveat Lector-

The McNair Report on Allegations of Slavery and Slavery-Like Practices
in Sudan

Lord McNair
The House of Lords
Westminster
London
SW1A OPW

Date of Publication: 17 November 1997

Introduction

I have recently returned from a working visit to Sudan, from 4 - 11
October, 1997. This visit was the culmination of an examination of
slavery allegations made against the government of Sudan, and took me to
the states of South and North Kordofan.

My first trip to Sudan was in September 1994. Before this first visit to
Sudan, I had read several negative press reports of abuses on the part
of the government against political opponents and against Christians in
the south of the country. My overall impression was that there was
something contrived about some of these reports which suggested to me
the possibility of a deliberate campaign from some quarters to discredit
the government. I spent one week in Sudan in September 1994 and visited
Khartoum, Juba and Kadugli, the capital of South Kordofan. My feeling
that the Sudanese government was being unfairly portrayed was confirmed
to a degree. In February 1996 I received an invitation to observe the
parliamentary and presidential elections due to take place in March. I
discovered that the entire electoral process was being shunned by all
the countries of the "North".

Between these two visits a new issue had emerged. Serious allegations of
government involvement in slavery and slavery-related practices had been
made by groups such as Christian Solidarity International, and its
president, Baroness Cox, a deputy speaker of the British House of Lords.
Understandably, the allegations attracted the attention of the media, of
other members of parliament, and of the British Foreign and Commonwealth
Office.

Any allegations that slavery is being inspired or endorsed to any degree
by any government is a very grave matter indeed. My initial scepticism
about the accuracy of these allegations increased in the face of the
earnest good intentions I had noticed in the government officials I had
met in 1994. I was, however, new to Africa and the Sudan and I decided
to withhold judgment on this issue until I had a better understanding of
the situation. I followed the allegations as they appeared until my most
recent visit in October 1997.

My October 1997 Visit

On the occasion of this visit I accepted the invitation of the Human
Rights Committee of the Sudanese Parliament to investigate the
allegations of slavery. As an integral part of this investigation I
visited the states of Northern and Southern Kordofan, the site of many
of the allegations. I was accompanied by the vice-chairman of the Human
Rights Committee, the Reverend Adi Ambrose, and the Member of Parliament
for Kadugli East, Emir Hamid Harim, who is a traditional leader from the
Nuba mountains.

We travelled first to El Obeid in North Kordofan and then to Dellinge
and Kadugli in South Kordofan. We had a number of different meetings in
locations in both states. Two themes emerged. Firstly we could find no
evidence of slavery. Secondly, the main concerns of the community
leaders we met was for the hundreds, if not thousands, of Nuba and Arab
children who had been abducted by the forces of John Garang. They
appealed to us for help in having the children returned, and various
ideas for achieving this were discussed.

Indeed, it would appear to me that the abduction by the SPLA of upwards
of ten thousand mainly southern Sudanese children over the past decade
or more is a far more tangible manifestation of slavery or slavery-like
practices than anything alleged by Christian Solidarity International.
As early as 1991, the American state department had reported the
forcible conscription of "at least 10 000 male minors" (1).  The plight
of these children has been well documented by Human Rights Watch/Africa,
the Children's Rights Project and others. Many of these children have
died in the course of the war, either through being forced into combat
by the SPLA, or through the squalid conditions in which they were kept.
There is no doubt that the abduction of these boys was a deliberate act
of SPLA policy. It is a matter of record that these boys have been
isolated in camps far away from the public gaze. They are held in
preparation for forced labour or forced military service. From my
understanding of what Human Rights Watch/Africa calls slavery, these
children would appear to be living in conditions qualifying as slavery.
It is puzzling to find CSI supporting the SPLA for whom such practices
are deliberate policy.

I hope that CSI will use its close association with the SPLA to persuade
John Garang to release those children whom he is holding. It is well
documented that the ICRC has for a number of years sought the release of
these children. This has not been possible because of the intransigence
of John Garang and the SPLA.

I have, as I mentioned, followed the issue of slavery allegations for
some time. This visit, together with my other research, has led me to
the conclusion that there is no slavery, certainly within North and
South Kordofan which have been the focus of many of the allegations.
Having reviewed the literature over the past three years, and having
visited the areas in question on two occasions, I note that these
allegations may have arisen out of inter-tribal conflict over water and
pastures, a regrettable but nonetheless ever present source of
difficulty between settled and nomadic peoples in those parts of Sudan.

A Review of Allegations of Slavery in Sudan

Allegations of slavery and slavery-related practices began to emerge
from Sudan in the mid-to-late 1980s. The backdrop to these allegations
was the Sudanese civil war. This conflict has essentially been fought
intermittently between the central government and sections of southern
Sudan's political opposition since before Sudanese independence in 1956.
The 1972 Addis Ababa agreement between the government of Sudan and the
then southern rebel leadership resulted in an end to conflict, and this
lasted until 1983. In that year, the present Sudanese civil war started
between the government in Khartoum and the Sudan Peoples' Liberation
Army (SPLA), which came to be led by Colonel John Garang. It is clear
that the civil war has been a viciously fought conflict, and has caused
enormous suffering to the civilian populations in the areas affected by
the war.

Allegations of slavery specifically emerged in the wake of a policy
decision by each of the belligerents. In the mid-1980s the SPLA
deliberately chose to bring the civil war to the hitherto uninvolved
states of Darfur, Kordofan and into the Nuba mountains. SPLA units
attacked an Arab village in southern Kordofan, killing sixty tribesmen
and wounding over eighty others. Following this the government of the
day armed large numbers of Baggara tribesmen and used them as tribal
militias. The SPLA also similarly armed tribal militias sympathetic to
them.

Overnight, what had hitherto been limited inter-tribal disputes over
water and pastures, between nomadic Arabised tribes such as the Rizeigat
and their Dinka neighbours, suddenly escalated and was made all the more
lethal by the introduction of sophisticated weaponry. The Sadiq al-Mahdi
government came to power in 1986 and vigorously continued with the
policy of arming tribal militias with all the consequences that brought
with it. The tribal militias were encouraged to take the war to Dinka
communities suspected of supporting the SPLA. There is also no doubt
that these militias were undisciplined and out of control. This
indiscipline led in part to the infamous El Diein massacre in March 1987
when one thousand Dinka men, women and children were killed in actions
which the Sadiq al-Mahdi government attempted to cover up.

In the past, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, the official
United States government publication on human rights world-wide, has
stated that any slavery-like practices that did exist were the result of
the civil war in western Sudan, that they were concentrated in areas in
which government administration was weak or non-existent, and that the
arming of militias was a factor. In 1990, for example, the entry on
Sudan stated that:

"Slavery reportedly exists in those remote areas where government
control is weak and where displaced persons fleeing the war zones come
into contact with armed groups...The revival of slavery is often blamed
on economic pressure and the civil war, especially the practice of
arming tribal militias". (2)

The present government of Sudan has had to deal with the legacy of this
policy of the Sadiq al-Mahdi government. It is clear that most of the
questionable practices and unacceptable patterns of behaviour occurred
under the Sadiq al-Mahdi government

Responses of the Government of Sudan to Allegations of Slavery

I am satisfied that the present Government of Sudan is deeply concerned
about allegations of slavery within its borders. I have reached this
conclusion after a number of discussions with senior Sudanese government
ministers and with the governors of several of the states concerned as
well as open-air discussions with tribal elders in the Nuba mountains.

I note that Sudan is a signatory to several of the conventions on the
abolition of slavery, slavery-like practices and institutions, and the
slave trade. These include the 1926 Slavery Convention, as amended by
the 1953 New York protocol, and the Supplementary Convention, ratified
in 1956 and 1957. I further note that Sudanese law is clear in
unambiguously criminalising any of the practices, such as kidnapping,
abduction, unlawful detention, forced labour and unlawful confinement,
that could be construed as slavery, crimes punishable by imprisonment.
It is also noteworthy that in its 1992 official government publication,
the Sudan Yearbook, the government stated that:

"The issue of the slave trade ... has been, and will continue to be for
ever, the most atrocious practice ever known in history".

It is also clear, and a matter of record, that the Government of Sudan
has from its earliest days in power been responsive to instances of
abduction and kidnapping brought to its attention. Indeed, Anti-Slavery
International clearly documents the fact that in November 1989 the
Governor of Darfur, Abu al-Gasim Ibrahim, acted decisively when made
aware of the concerns of Dinka communities that Rezeigat tribesmen had
captured Dinka children in the course of inter-tribal fighting. These
concerns had been brought to the attention of the government by a Dinka
"retrieval committee".

The Governor of Darfur brought representatives of the Dinka community to
his state guest house, and provided them with accommodation, while he
organised an inter-tribal conference for the return of the children.
This conference was held in mid-December 1989, and resulted in the
return of 103 children. Anti-Slavery International records that the work
of the Dinka retrieval committee has continued to this day:

"when it collects information about the slaves, it presents it to the
government of south Darfur. If the evidence is accepted, its
representatives are given a police escort to confront the captors, and
the children are then taken back without any money changing hands".

The Dinka retrieval committee has also been active in the neighbouring
southern  state of Bahr al-Ghazal, where "the committee was able to
bring cases of abducted children to the attention of the Bahr al-Ghazal
authorities". The committee has continued to recover abducted children
from both Darfur and Bahr al-Ghazal states.

Anti-Slavery International also records that the Dinka community have
brought cases of abduction to trial in al-Obeid, the capital of North
Kordofan state. In mid-1994, for example, two Dinka leaders went to
court in connection with a number of children abducted in 1987, during
the administration of Sadiq al-Mahdi. The court ordered the release of
the children in question (3).

It is also of note that in its 1994 publication, Civilian Devastation:
Abuses by All Parties in the War in Southern Sudan, Human Rights
Watch/Africa cites a United States State Department cable reporting that
government authorities in Wau and Aweil had freed kidnapped women and
children held by tribal militias (4).

I also note that in Human Rights Watch/Africa's 1996 study, Behind the
Red Line: Political Repression in Sudan, for example, numerous further
instances of direct Sudanese government intervention to secure the
release of various numbers of illegally held people are recorded. Human
Rights Watch/Africa stated, for example, that in 1995 government
authorities in Aweil freed 500 captured women and children who had been
taken prisoner during fighting between tribal militias.

In Nyala, two young Dinka women were freed after their relatives brought
the case before a court. Government authorities in El Diein also ordered
the release of  "dozens of Dinka children brought to El Diein and
surrounding villages by raiders who had captured them from the area
around Aweil in Bahr El Ghazal in early 1996". The government then
handed the children over to the Dinka community in El Diein. Human
Rights Watch/Africa also provided the example of an orphaned Dinka boy,
kidnapped in 1986 under the Sadiq al-Mahdi government. The boy's uncle
found him and sought the help of the Sudanese police: "The police issued
a warrant for the release of the boy to the uncle" (5).  Thus, on both a
macro and micro level, the evidence clearly exists, as presented by
reputable human rights organisations, that the present Sudanese
government has, in its many components, intervened to free victims of
inter-tribal raiding and violence - many of them illegally held since
the days of the Sadiq al-Mahdi government.

The Sudanese government has made a further point which is that, in
definitions of slavery, there must be an intention to permanently
deprive people of their liberties. The government has argued that in
inter-tribal clashes captives are taken and that they are usually
returned following a resolution of the particular problems, be they
water or pastures, that led to the conflict. It has also been documented
that traditional inter-tribal conferences have attempted to settle what
has been a regrettable feature of inter-tribal life in western and west-
central Sudan. Human Rights Watch/Africa's 1996 report, Behind the Red
Line: Political Repression in Sudan, describes what can only be seen as
an inter-tribal conference for the settling of issues and exchange of
prisoners:

"In late 1995, meetings reportedly were held between representatives of
the Dinka and the Rizeigat (Arabized western tribes, originally nomads
in Darfur), a subgroup of the Baggara. In exchange for access to the
fresh pasture land and water controlled by the SPLA, the Rizeigat agreed
to release Dinka "prisoners" captured during their raids. They
reportedly brought with them to a meeting a list of 674 children already
identified and whose release has been promised. They were given Ls.
250,000 (US $473) for the immediate transport and clothing of twenty
children said to have been gathered in Nyala in Southern Darfur" (6).

In the light of this and other evidence, I find that there is no
foundation for the allegations of slavery levelled at the government of
Sudan. I also note that several international human rights organisations
and activists have also found little evidence for such allegations. Alex
de Waal, co-director of African Rights, for example, has stated:

"there is no evidence for centrally-organized, government-directed slave
raiding or slave trade". (7)

Anti-Slavery International has also stated that

"the charge that government troops engage in raids for the purpose of
seizing slaves in not backed by the evidence". (8)

It is also worth recording that the 1992 entry on Sudan in Country
Reports on Human Rights Practices clearly states:

"Sudanese law prohibits forced or compulsory labor and there was no
evidence of organised or officially sanctioned slavery". (9)

It is my conclusion that what was true in 1992 as far as the United
States Department of State was concerned holds true for Sudan at the
time of my writing this report.

Because of this conclusion, I have also attempted to trace the origin
and inspiration for many of these allegations of slavery. I am sad to
place on record that the single most prominent vehicle for these
allegations has been Christian Solidarity International. I find that
their allegations are unsubstantiated. I must also place on record my
deep concern at their sensationalist claims, and those of others they
have brought to Sudan, to have "bought slaves" . I am personally
unconvinced that these people were "slaves" in any accepted sense of the
word. Both African Rights and Anti-Slavery International have also been
critical of such claims on this issue. Alex de Waal, for example, has
stated:

"It is most probable that they were in fact paying a ransom to a go-
between in a scheme whereby families pay, through a middleman, for their
hostage children to be redeemed. They were not in a slave market".

I feel the interventions by CSI and its President, Baroness Cox, on this
issue have been inflammatory and irresponsible. They have deliberately
sought publicity and, in so doing, have endangered what is at best a
delicate process.

The Baltimore Sun Expedition

Perhaps the incident which received the most attention in respect of
allegations of slavery was the claim by the Baltimore Sun newspaper to
have "bought" two slaves in Sudan. It is this incident that both African
Rights and Anti-Slavery International have referred to in the above
paragraph on the ransoming of hostages. The Baltimore Sun sent two
journalists to investigate claims by Christian Solidarity International
that slaves were available for purchase. Indeed, the trip was arranged
by Christian Solidarity International. The newspaper claimed that this
proved slavery in Sudan.

It is clear to me, however, that the journalists from the Baltimore Sun
were in no way "buying slaves". What they were taking part in was a
corrupted example of the way some Sudanese families are forced to redeem
children or other relatives who have been abducted in the course of the
inter-tribal raiding and conflict that has spiralled in Sudan because of
the continuing civil war. The man they paid money to for the two
children was not a slave trader, and the venue was not a slave market.
The views of African Rights and Anti-Slavery International are cited
above.

This type of journalism concerns me for several reasons. First of all it
is media sensationalism at its very worst. The claim that such coverage
proves slavery is obviously false, it proves no such thing. What it does
do, however, is fuel the propaganda and mythology that has blighted
Sudan over the past few years. Secondly, such Western intervention
clearly inflates the price that is being paid in such hostage-exchange
situations, pricing ordinary Sudanese families out of the market. This
is a clear concern to those hostage-retrieval committees that exist in
local communities in Sudan.  Anti-Slavery International, for example,
quotes from "a source close to the Dinka retrieval committee":

"Such outside intervention with big sums of money may make matters worse
and can encourage others to capture and "facilitate" the retrieval of
more children for economic motives".  (10)

Thirdly, and perhaps more worrying is that such sensationalist efforts
could in themselves fuel the process whereby children and others are
abducted to provide "slaves for sale" to naïve Western journalists or
publicity hunters.

Fourthly, this sort of coverage concerns me because it fuels already
distorted international images of Sudan, sometimes even within Sudan
itself. The absurdity of this situation was manifested in the course of
my fact-finding visit to North Kordofan. Our delegation visited the
impressive Roman Catholic church in El-Obeid. We met and talked with
Father Tombe, a widely-respected Sudanese Catholic priest. Father Tombe
had previously spent several years in Kadugli building up a flourishing
congregation and had also served as a priest in Darfur state. We asked
him whether he had any evidence for the allegations of slavery. He said
no, he had heard reports, and had read or heard about them in the media,
presumably the international media.

We were thus confronted with the absurd situation that a veteran Roman
Catholic priest with several years of service in the Nuba mountains,
other parts of Kordofan, and Darfur, had seen no evidence whatsoever
that substantiated allegations of slavery. He did say that he had heard
about the allegations in the international media. If the allegations had
been true, his congregation, as Christians, would presumably have been
the target of any such slaving activities.

Conclusion

In conclusion,  I found that after several years of interest in this
issue, which has included visits to Kordofan, the allegations of slavery
made against the government of Sudan are unfounded. It is additionally
clear that there has been something of an international campaign to
isolate Sudan by means of these allegations. I echo the concerns of
several international human rights organisations which have condemned
the inflammatory nature of these allegations and I question the
motivation behind them.

It is my sincere hope that the British government will look at the
reality of the situation in Sudan as distinct from the view put forward
by Christian Solidarity International and I hope also that CSI will
distance itself from those with a political axe to grind who have
compromised its good intentions.

Notes

1.  Country Reports on Human Rights Practices 1991, US Department of
State, Washington, DC, 1992, p. 382

2.  Ibid, p. 397

3.  Peter Verney, Slavery in Sudan, Sudan Update and Anti-Slavery
International, London, 1997, pp. 16, 17

4.  US Embassy, Khartoum, Sudan, cable released 12 May 1994, in
Washington, DC

5.  Behind the Red Line: Political Repression in Sudan, Human Rights
Watch/Africa, Washington, DC, 1996, p. 309

6.  Ibid, p. 309

7.  Alex de Waal, "Sudan: Social Engineering, Slavery and War", Covert
ACTION Quarterly, Washington, DC, Spring 1997, p. 63

8.  Verney, Slavery in Sudan, op cit, p. 20

9.  Country Reports on Human Rights Practices 1992, op cit, p. 262

10.  Verney, Slavery in Sudan, op cit, p. 20

ENDS








--
European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council
1 Northumberland Avenue, London, WC2N 5BW
Tel: 0207 872 5434   Fax: 0207 753 2848

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to